Matthew 14:13-21 · Jesus Feeds the Five Thousand
Partners With the Eternal
Matthew 14:13-21
Sermon
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"Bring them ... to me." - Matthew 14:18

One of the best known stories of Jesus concerns the feeding of five thousand persons. To assuage the appetites of that many people all at one time and place would be quite an achievement anytime, anywhere. But the achievement is infinitely great when it is accomplished with five loaves of bread and two small fish. I am sure a great many restauranteurs and homemakers would like to know how to make so little food go so far. I am sure it would be important to a lot of people to have this information. This is information, however, which you will not get from this sermon. What you will get, though, I honestly believe, is something of vastly greater importance.

To comprehend the high significance of this event, we must see it in context. We must see it as the immediate sequel to what had gone before. In Matthew's telling of the story (14:13-21) this is made clear to us. He writes, "Now when Jesus heard this, he withdrew ... to a lonely place apart ... When the crowds heard it they followed him ... from the towns." Well, what was this which Jesus had heard? What was this news which had come to him and to the villagers round about?

Simply this, that John was dead. King Herod had ordered him beheaded in jail, John's disciples had buried his headless body, and then had brought the word to Jesus. From childhood, Jesus and John had been friends, their mothers were cousins, deeply devoted to one another. In early manhood, John had become a preacher of righteousness and justice. As Jesus had begun his own teaching, it had been John who had presented him to the people and baptized him at the Jordan River.

Now John was dead. His crusading voice was silenced. The enemies of righteousness had prevailed. Imagine the consternation and despair which must have prevailed among his scattered disciples.

And now the word had reached Jesus - and his disciples. What chance did righteousness have in the world? How could anyone or any group do much good in a world where a man like Herod could have his way whenever he wanted to? Who could stand up against power like this, against tyranny of this kind? Without doubt, the disciples of Jesus must have experienced a time of deep discouragement. What could they hope for or hope to accomplish with so much against them? If this fate had befallen John, would Jesus then be next?

Well, don't you think Jesus knew the thoughts of his followers and friends? Don't you think he perceived their despair? Of course he did, no doubt about that. And what did he do about it? The record is that, taking his disciples with him, "he withdrew to a lonely place apart." Why? Why did Jesus do what he did at this particular time? There were various reasons perhaps, but one was paramount, I think. Jesus wished to help his disciples, to take them beyond their discouragement. He wanted to use this occasion as a teaching opportunity. By means of it, he wanted to provide his disciples an important insight, to give them a deeper understanding, a greater hope.

Now note carefully what happened there in that "lonely place" that day. As news of John's death spread among the villages, the people from the whole surrounding country also came to that Galilean hillside where Jesus was. And in the evening of that day, feeding that multitude of people, Jesus revealed to his disciples one of the landmark truths of the divine-human relationship, one of the most exciting prospects the human mind can ever grasp.

Responding to the disciples' concern for the multitude, Jesus said to them, "You give them something to eat." But they were unable to do this, saying, "We have only five loaves and two fish." If we may state this conversation in a slightly different way, Jesus said, You feed the people, and the disciples said, We don't have what it takes.

But the story doesn't end here and I don't think Jesus ever intended it should. There was something he wanted to teach those people, to show them, to demonstrate. He who often taught in parables, telling stories, was now about to teach through a parable of a different kind, a parable of action - not a teaching story, but a teaching act. So he said: bring those loaves and fish to me.

Bring them to me, he was saying, and let's see if TOGETHER you and I might be able to feed those people. So they brought the loaves and the fish, and Jesus blessed them. And what next? He gave them back to his disciples! He handed them right back to the disciples who brought them, saying: Now, you give these to the people. They did; and all the people were fed.

The disciples must have been utterly amazed at what happened there. "What has happened here?" they must have asked. "What is the meaning of this?" they must have said to one another. Their question was inevitable - just as Jesus intended it should be, I think. And the answer was equally as inevitable as the question: What we could not do has been done, the people we could not feed have been fed. The Master did it: with what we gave him, the Master fed all those people. Of the very little we gave, somehow much was made. If he can do that with a little food that is given to him, what may he do with anything we may place in his hands? With him, apparently, anything is possible. Herod doesn't have all the power; we don't have to be afraid of Herod any more, or of anyone else. Righteousness and fairness are not doomed, after all. Take heart; with the Master, we can do more than we thought we could.

Now, perhaps not all the disciples there with Jesus on that occasion understood the full meaning of this episode before the sun went down that evening. But I would guess that many of them understood much of it. To whatever extent they learned, I am confident this is the lesson their Master intended, I suspect it is the lesson he had in mind when he brought them to that place. Yes, I'm sure he had "compassion" on that large number of people who hadn't had their evening meal; but, after all, they were not going to starve before morning. To have missed that meal would have been nothing more than a momentary fast. Jesus did not feed them to save their lives; he fed them for some other reason. And the reason, really, was his disciples - their encouragement, their perception of who he intended them to be in their relationship with him.

And who did he intend them to be? Partners! Jesus was letting his disciples know that he and they were in partnership. He was letting all of us know that God involves his people in working together with him to get things done in the world.

In a partnership each brings to it what he has, each commits his resources to a common purpose. On his side of this partnership, our Lord has hugely given. For the purpose of redeeming the world, the Father gave his Son, and the given Christ gave his life. And so he invites all of us to bring what we have, our loaves and our fish, placing them in his hands, committing them to this same purpose, entering into partnership with him. It is not an empty phrase when the Apostle Paul writes of God's people "as workers together with him." (2 Corinthians 6:1) It is a phrase packed with enormous and specific content. For, you see, the people of God are partners with the Eternal.

Historically, God has always worked with people, and through people, to get things done in the world. Remember, please, that it was with the food the disciples brought to Jesus that he fed the multitude. And he didn't feed them, really; it was the disciples who did that; it was from their hands those people received that food that day. It is the way of God to use human instrumentality to accomplish his purpose. Perhaps he could by-pass the human instrumentality and get his work done without the participation of his people, but he rarely does, if ever.

A story has long been told concerning a country preacher who came upon a member of his parish working in his newly-made garden alongside the road. With an air of great piousness, the preacher said, "Brother William, you ought to be very grateful to God for all the beautiful tomatoes and potatoes and beans the Lord will give you in your garden this year." Glancing up and down along neat rows of planted vegetables, Brother William slowly replied, "Yes, Parson, I suppose so, but, you know, you really should have seen this patch of ground last year when the Lord had it all by himself."

Ethan Allen was a big, voluble, rather flamboyant Vermonter, Colonial patriot, a somewhat controversial hero of the American Revolution. He organized a rag-tag army of freedom-lovers known as the Green Mountain Boys. On May 10, 1775, Allen and his "Boys" captured from the British the strategic Fort Ticonderoga. Having returned from this successful venture, Allen did something which he was wont to do sometimes as the mood suited: on Sunday morning he attended church. During the service the pastor offered a long prayer, a great deal of which was an offering of praise to God for the liberation of Fort Ticonderoga. How great was God, and how good, to have wrested that fort from the enemy! Ethan Allen, having sat through as much of this as he could endure, interrupted the pastor, saying, "Parson Dewey ... Parson Dewey, please mention to the Lord that I and the Green Mountain Boys were there!"

The plain fact is, of course, that wherever God has done things in the world somebody has been there helping him do them. Yes, perhaps Jesus could have fed that multitude without the five loaves and two fish which the disciples brought to him, but he didn't. He let his disciples help, and he used what they brought.

Let me ask you a question: How much can you point to which God has done in the last 2,000 years that did not involve human participation? Look for a moment at the record; observe how God has taken his people into partnership with him.

When the "great flood" was coming, and God wanted to spare a few people who were righteous, he called the man Noah and said, "PREPARE an ark."

When God wanted to establish and train a special branch of the human family, he said to the man Abraham, "GET OUT of your own country and go to a land that I will show you."

When God wanted to get his slave people out of Egypt, he stopped the man Moses on a mountain path in Midian and said to him, "GO DOWN and lead my people out."

When God wanted to construct a temple in Jerusalem, he spoke to the man, Solomon, saying, "BUILD me a house."

When God wanted to strengthen and encourage his people in Babylonian exile, he called the man Ezekiel, and said, "SPEAK to this people."

When God wanted, at Damascus, to bring aid to the sin-stricken Saul of Tarsus, he summoned the man Ananias, saying, "ARISE and go into the street called Straight."

When, in Christianity's early dawn, God wanted to bring comfort and encouragement to his persecuted and suffering people, he spoke to a prisoner on the Island of Patmos, the man named John, saying, "WRITE, and send what you have written to the seven churches in Asia."

So does the record read, so does the story go on. It is the record of God calling human persons into partnership with him, involving them in what he was about to do in his world, assigning them their roles to play in the mighty drama of his working power. Note these action words, these mighty verbs: prepare - get out - go down - build - speak - arise - write! To each of these persons God was saying: Bring what you have, do what you can, and together we shall do something for the world.

When the Midianites were upon Israel, God called Gideon from a threshing-floor at Ophrah. When troubled Cornelius prayed in Cesarea, God called Peter from a housetop in Joppa. When the Hebrew people were brutally afflicted by the tyrant king Ahab, God called Elijah from the shade of a tree in Beersheba.

And now hear this: When God wanted to get his Son, our Savior, into the world, even then, and especially then, he spoke to a human person, to a woman named Mary, and said, "You shall bear a Son ... call his name Jesus." That Son, this Christ, our Savior, is at work in the world today - and he invites us to join him.

But, you say, perhaps there isn't much I can do, there isn't much that I can bring, my talents are small, my resources few. Well, be reminded, my friend, this is precisely what those ancient disciples believed when they brought to Jesus their five loaves and two fish. But they did bring them - this is the important thing: they did bring those loaves and fish. And they were surprised. And you may be too - when you bring what you've got, however small and of whatever kind.

When what you give is put together with what God gives, miracles happen. Here is an instance where two and two do not necessarily equal four, for the combination of your gift with the gift of God is not a matter of addition, but of multiplication. And if two times two is four, and four times four is sixteen, and sixteen times sixteen is 256, who can tell what the end will be, what the final values are?

You may think your life's assets are very small, your time short, your abilities ordinary, your talents meager, your strength unequal to your needs. But only bring these assets into a partnership with God, and you will be amazed to discover how really great they are.

Those disciples, with Jesus long ago, made the discovery that they had far more than they supposed - if only it were put into his hands. But what they had was of such value only as this was done, only as this commitment was made. Jesus - the disciples - and this feeding of five thousand: suppose they had tried it without him? Suppose, having been party to this miracle, on the following Thursday, without him, they had invited all the folks in the villages of Galilee

and the whole population of the Jordan valley to gather at an appointed time on some mountainside, saying, "Come, and we'll feed you." I wonder what would have happened. I doubt if that episode would have made the Guiness Book of World Records - unless in the category of gigantic failures. While they learned that day that they had more than they had thought they had, they also learned, I think, that without the Lord it wasn't worth very much.

Elsewhere Jesus says, "Without me you can do nothing." (John 15:5) It's a long leap from that to this: "With God all things are possible." (Matthew 19:26) Is it not reasonable, then, that God who is a doer and wants to get things done in the world, should invite us into partnership with him? There is a profound nugget of truth in an old saying: "Without God we cannot; without us he will not." He seeks the human instrumentality through whom to work; we need the divine touch to accomplish anything which ultimately will matter very much.

Partnership with God! It is here that all of life's good qualities are at their best, that all of life's assets are worth their most, that life's joy of achievement reaches its highest summit.

Not mere pupils, but participants! Not just receivers, but givers! This understanding of who they were began to come clear to the first disciples of Jesus long ago. May it be so clear to us today that it will take possession of us, mind and soul.

Workers together with God! This is who we are - in every kind word we can say, every thoughtful deed we can do, in every warm handclasp we can offer, in every glory we can share, in every healing touch we can bring to the hurt of another - partners with the Eternal in the ways we use whatever loaves and fish we shall ever have at our command to give.

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